Don't Accept A Remote Role Without Asking These 4 Questions
Robert Glazer
5X Entrepreneur, #1 WSJ & USA Today Bestselling Author, Top .1% Podcast Host and Keynote Speaker. Board Chair & Founder @ Acceleration Partners
My?#Elevate? series on LinkedIn has over 300,000 subscribers.?Subscribe here ?to receive future editions directly in your feed.
We’re in the middle of?a great resignation , as employees?exit jobs?at unprecedented rates.?Additionally, many?job?hunters are looking for?remote work opportunities ?and?flexibility, especially if they are leaving a company that is preventing them from working from home beyond the pandemic.?
Applicants?searching for remote roles will find an abundance of options—far more than were available in 2019. But?it’s?crucial?to know that not all remote work opportunities are equal; just because a company offers remote?work?doesn’t mean they have?an effective remote workplace, nor does it mean that?you will enjoy their approach.?
Before?accepting?a?new?job,?ask these four essential questions to ensure?it’s?the right?remote?workplace for you.??
What are your company’s core?values??
One key?indicator of a successful remote organization is a healthy company culture.?And healthy cultures typically are built on?core values.?You need to get a sense in the interview process of what a?company’s core values are?and, more crucially, how they are recognized and represented in the company’s daily functions.??
Effective core values should?differentiate a company’s culture and drive employee?behavior and decision-making.?Ideally, they are the traits an employee must demonstrate to gain recognition or advancement in the organization.?This is especially true in remote organizations—when employees are not in the same workspace as colleagues or managers,?it’s?important to have values that everyone uses as guidelines for how they show up for work.??
If the person interviewing you can speak passionately about the company’s core values, and how they are taught and upheld in the company,?that’s?a good sign for the organization’s cultural health.?If they?can’t?or seem to just be wall art, beware.??
What percentage of employees are remote?overall or on my?team??
When evaluating a potential remote work job,?it’s?crucial to?ask?just how prevalent remote work is at the company,?or within a team. Do most employees work from home at least some of the time, or are you going to be one of the first fully remote employees at the company??
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While remote work always has some benefits—the lack of a commute, for one—it can be?isolating?to be the only remote worker on your team,?or one of only a handful in the?company.?Ideally, you want to be on a level playing field with your colleagues, whether that means being one of many remote employees on a team, or at an organization where remote employees have equal opportunities for collaboration,?recognition?and advancement as your in-office peers.??
If?you learn that?few people?at your potential workplace work remotely, ask how?the organization?ensures?remote employees feel included. The answer to that?question will be revealing.??
How often do people?get together?in?person??
There’s?a misconception that?employees who enjoy remote work don’t want to connect with their colleagues in person.?You want to work at a company that has?highly impactful in-person connection?opportunities, either for work or socially.?Even something as simple as a well-planned, engaging all-company annual summit can?create an incredible level of depth over a few days of?bonding and learning?together in person.??
Companies that offer remote work?can, and should, create valuable in-person experiences for their teams.?Many remote companies, including Acceleration Partners,?hire?employees in hubs, or large pockets of talent in certain geographic areas, to make it easier to execute these types of programs.?Ask interviewers if their company does these types of in-person events, and how often?they’ll?give you the chance to connect and collaborate in person.??
How often am I expected to come to the?office??
This is a crucial question to ask when applying to a hybrid workplace, where some employees are in the office and others work from home. Few things are more stressful for a remote employee than being called into the office on short notice for a meeting, training or other in-person work.?Plus, your company’s expectations on how often?you’ll?come to the office?may determine where you decide to live.?
If?an interviewer?can’t?give you a sense of how often you’ll have to come into the office, and what the company’s established policy is, that’s?not a great sign. You may be walking into a situation?where you are frequently being pulled into the office?and will lose a lot of the flexibility that you were seeking.??
Remote work can be excellent for professional fulfillment and work/life?integration. However,?many companies are offering this for the first time and there will?certainly?be?many?examples?of?both effective and ineffective?remote work.?Ask the right questions to?make sure you’re joining a?company whose?version of remote or hybrid work is right for?you.
Robert Glazer is the founder and CEO of?Acceleration Partners . Join 200,000+ global leaders who follow his inspirational weekly newsletter?Friday Forward ?or?invite him to speak . Robert is also a Wall Street Journal and USA Today bestselling author. His new book,?How To Thrive In The Virtual Workplace ,?is a #1 Wall Street Journal bestseller.
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3 年I am puzzled. There are more people and far less jobs going around throughout the world. The post gives an impression otherwise like people can simply quit and get an equal or better job just like that. This is possible for only the highly skilled people who are a small minority. The majority cannot risk quitting just because their Co is no more allowing them to Work from Home.
I Invest in Leaders, Their Employees, Strategic Partnerships, Companies & Innovations to Grow Profits Through Organizational Culture & Leadership Transformation
3 年Thank you Robert Glazer. I'll admit that I ONLY read the questions. But, your format is an excellent example of valuable well written content:-) Reading only that gave me all the usable actionable information I needed to apply it:-) tim #bgreen??
Passionate Techno Functional Leader, Experienced E/E System Design & Development, Competency Development, Leading & Developing Diverse Team, & Managing Multiple Projects.
3 年Indeed good as per current scenario! I really found interesting and more meaningful is "How often do people?get together?in?person", as Remote working or #WFH is the need of this situation and most of the organization have process & policies in place "which keep updating as and when situations evolved" but I am sure the "human connect or How often do people?get together?in?person" was missing. Core values will be available at company portal, but yes we can ask how organization live up the core value in day to day work!
Operations - Empty Empire Management Company, Music Executive -African Bureau of Music, Business Executive - Pia Pounds Limited.
3 年Very useful